South China Morning Post

Bob Marley’s band The Wailers to play in Hong Kong for the first time

- Kylie Knott kylie.knott@scmp.com

Hong Kong is having a reggae moment, fuelled by the release this month of the much-hyped biopic Bob Marley: One Love.

Starring British actor Kingsley Ben-Adir as Marley, it explores the reggae legend’s 1977 album

Exodus, which he made with his band The Wailers, and the lead-up to the 1978 One Love Peace Concert in the singer’s native Jamaica.

Known for hits such as “I Shot the Sheriff”, “Get Up”, “Stand Up”, “Jamming”, “No Woman, No Cry” and “Is This Love”, Bob Marley and the Wailers created culture-defining music that embodied the spirit of the ’70s reggae movement and left a deep groove in the industry, their beats reaching bars, beaches and backyards around the globe.

Marley died from a rare form of skin cancer in 1981, aged just 36. But The Wailers played on. And next month they will hold their first gig in Hong Kong, at Hong Kong Observatio­n Wheel and AIA Vitality Park, on April 5. The band will play the full

Legend album, a compilatio­n of Bob Marley and the Wailers’ hits released in 1984 that is the bestsellin­g reggae album of all time. It has topped the US Billboard 200’s year-end reggae chart for the last four years.

“If people have just one reggae album in their collection, it’s usually Legend,” says Paul Thompson, co-founder of the Hong Kong Internatio­nal Reggae Ska Festival, which is organising the event.

“[The Observatio­n Wheel] is an iconic venue and with the Rugby Sevens happening in the city [at the same time], the vibe will be amazing.”

The Hong Kong show will see Aston Barrett Jnr, The Wailers’ drummer since 2016, perform for one of the first times since portraying his father, Aston Barrett, in

Bob Marley: One Love. Barrett Snr was the Wailers’ bass player and musical director, who played with Marley as well as with the band for decades after the singer’s death. Known by the nickname “Family Man” because of his close relationsh­ip with the band, he died in February aged 77.

While The Wailers’ performanc­e will be the highlight for Marley fans in Hong Kong, they can also celebrate his life at the Dead& bar in Lan Kwai Fong on Saturday when it hosts the Hong Kong launch of the single “Missing Mr Marley”.

Originally written and sung by the late British singer-songwriter Colin Scot as a tribute to Marley in the year he died, “Missing Mr Marley” was recorded in 1982 in Copenhagen. It was co-produced by Danish entreprene­ur Jens Peter Jensen, who later relocated to Hong Kong, but it was never publicly released.

Fast-forward and Jensen’s daughter Christina Brandt Jensen, a familiar face on Hong Kong’s arts scene – she is a founder of the Cheung Chau Wave and After Sunset festivals – was determined to make sure the track saw the light of day.

She approached Filipino musician Budoy Marabiles to work on the song with his reggae band Junior Kilat, who then teamed up with another reggae band, Selah Dub Warriors, also from the Philippine­s. The track they created uses Scot’s original lyrics with entirely new music.

The event at Dead& will bring together a unique line-up of reggae artists from Hong Kong, the Philippine­s and Shanghai.

Filipino musicians performing a song in Hong Kong that was written by a Briton, first recorded by a Dane and honouring a Jamaican is the sort of coming together of nationalit­ies in the name of peace, love and music that flows through Marley’s music. His lyrics resonate with musician Christy Chow. Born in Singapore, Chow has called Hong Kong home for 15 years, where she has been busy building cultural bridges between Jamaica, Hong Kong and the rest of China.

“With his messages for humanity, Bob Marley crosses generation­s,” Chow says.

In 2019, Chow joined

MouseFX, dubbed the father of Cantonese reggae in Hong Kong, on a trip to Jamaica to shoot a documentar­y and record the musician’s album MouseFX In

Jamaica. His “See Jah Light” music video was also shot on the Caribbean island.

In the studio with them was Skunga Kong, the grandnephe­w of the late Chinese-Jamaican reggae producer Leslie Kong, who founded the Jamaican record label Beverley’s and who, in 1962, recorded Marley’s first singles, “Judge Not” and “One Cup of Coffee”.

MouseFX, real name Mathias Tong, started out singing in reggae bands Crazy Lion and Sensi Lion before going solo in 2015.

Now a songwriter and producer, who also conducts workshops in Hong Kong that focus on reggae culture, he says the reggae scene has slowly gathered pace in the city over the years.

“Looking back more than 20 years ago, many people didn’t even know who Bob Marley was. And it was not common to meet someone with dreadlocks,” he says, his hair a nod to Marley’s long locks that grew from his belief in the Rastafaria­n spiritual movement that was rooted in 1930s Jamaica.

“The scene in Hong Kong is still growing … hopefully more people will love reggae music.”

The scene in Hong Kong is growing … hopefully more people will love reggae music MATHIAS TONG, SONGWRITER/ PRODUCER

The Wailers Live in Hong Kong, April 5, HK Observatio­n Wheel and AIA Vitality Park, 33 Man Kwong St, Central. Tickets (HK$560) available from Ticketflap.

 ?? Photo: Chiabella James “Missing Mr Marley” Hong Kong launch, March 23, 9pm-2am, Dead&, 18 Wo On Lane, Central. HK$350 including free-flow drinks. ?? A still from Bob Marley: One Love from Paramount Pictures.
Photo: Chiabella James “Missing Mr Marley” Hong Kong launch, March 23, 9pm-2am, Dead&, 18 Wo On Lane, Central. HK$350 including free-flow drinks. A still from Bob Marley: One Love from Paramount Pictures.

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